putbacks

When Countrywide Financial created deeply flawed mortgage-backed securities, it wasn't just selling bad financial products: It was breaking its contracts. Now some ordinary investors are suing Countrywide's buyer, Bank of America, to force it to repurchase those bad mortgages. That's their right, but there's nothing simple about this case, or its ramifications.

Banks' losses from buying back bad mortgages won't be as bad as previously expected, according to analysts at JPMorgan Chase, who estimate those repurchases will cost about 25% less than previously forecast.

The current mortgage crisis could hurt bank earnings in several ways, not all of them directly related to the foreclosure problem. One big risk is "putbacks," the faulty loans banks could be forced to repurchase. JPMorgan puts that cost at up to $120 billion.